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regular-article-logo Thursday, 02 May 2024

Iga Swiatek practises to be practical, not perfect

21-year-old was hot favourite to win year’s first grand slam in Melbourne but crashed to a 4-6, 4-6 defeat against Elena Rybakina

Doha Published 15.02.23, 06:44 AM
Iga Swiatek.

Iga Swiatek. File picture

World No.1 Iga Swiatek said she is trying to keep herself grounded and accepts that she cannot be perfect all the time following her fourth-round exit at the Australian Open, as the Pole prepares to defend her Qatar Open title this week.

The 21-year-old was hot favourite to win the year’s first grand slam in Melbourne but crashed to a 4-6, 4-6 defeat against Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina.

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“I really wanted to focus on getting my expectations lower and not expect from myself that I’m going to play perfectly all the time,” she told reporters.

Swiatek went on a 37- match winning run last year, and won the French and US Opens as well as titles at Doha, Indian Wells, Miami, Stuttgart, Rome and San Diego.

“Last season was so strange that it can mess with your head a little bit. I wanted to get both feet on the ground, focus on hard work and what I have to do on court,” Swiatek said.

“I was really happy because we did, I’d say it was like the last part of pre-season. Our practice was intense and the volume was big. I feel I could really focus on the technical stuff and just improve as a player.” Swiatek said she was not approaching the Qatar Open as a defending champion.

“I want to start this tournament as any other player, and we all do that and start from the same spot,” Swiatek said.

“There’s so many matches to win, so many obstacles to overcome that I want to be focused just on the next step.”

After her straight sets defeat to Elena Rybakina at the Australian Open, Eurosport expert Mats Wilander had praised Swiatek’s honesty.

Swiatek had lost 6-4, 6-4 to the Wimbledon champion and admitted she “felt the pressure” during the match.

In 2021, Naomi Osaka opened up about mental health issues and was widely credited for it, so Wilander hoped Swiatek will also be given a positive reaction for her straightforward answers in press conferences.

“Naomi Osaka was applauded for coming out (about her struggles) and she won four majors,” Wilander said.

“She came out after the fourth grand slam and said she has mental health issues and that was applauded in every way. But we never really knew why, was it the pressure or (something else)?

“With Iga, in a way she had the same success at a very young age, she is talking about it openly and we have all been somewhere exactly like that.”

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